Parshas Pinchas: The Light Isn't Mine
Sunday night I attended a farbrengen in honor of Yud-Beis and Yud-Gimmel Tammuz, celebrating the Frierdiker Rebbe's release from prison. Over the past few years, this group’s farbrengens have gravitated toward a different style. Instead of inviting one or two people to headline the evening—which can feel more like a lecture—someone introduces a theme and then we simply go around the table. Each person has a chance to share whatever that topic stirs in them. Stories. Questions. Struggles. Reflections. Every so often we pause for a niggun, and then someone else picks up the thread. I don't know if that's exactly what farbrengens looked like in the shtetls of old, but I'd like to imagine they felt something like this. Since we were gathering to celebrate the Frierdiker Rebbe's release, I suggested we spend some time exploring a simple question: What does freedom actually mean? After that, though, the floor wasn't mine anymore. That's when the farbrengen really ...